10 research outputs found

    Epigenetic Tailoring for the Production of Anti-Infective Cytosporones from the Marine Fungus Leucostoma persoonii

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    Recent genomic studies have demonstrated that fungi can possess gene clusters encoding for the production of previously unobserved secondary metabolites. Activation of these attenuated or silenced genes to obtain either improved titers of known compounds or new ones altogether has been a subject of considerable interest. In our efforts to discover new chemotypes that are effective against infectious diseases, including malaria and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), we have isolated a strain of marine fungus, Leucostoma persoonii, that produces bioactive cytosporones. Epigenetic modifiers employed to activate secondary metabolite genes resulted in enhanced production of known cytosporones B (1, 360%), C (2, 580%) and E (3, 890%), as well as the production of the previously undescribed cytosporone R (4). Cytosporone E was the most bioactive, displaying an IC90 of 13 µM toward Plasmodium falciparum, with A549 cytotoxicity IC90 of 437 µM, representing a 90% inhibition therapeutic index (TI90 = IC90 A459/IC90 P. falciparum) of 33. In addition, cytosporone E was active against MRSA with a minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 72 µM and inhibition of MRSA biofilm at roughly half that value (minimum biofilm eradication counts, MBEC90, was found to be 39 µM)

    Conversion of RpoS− Attenuated Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhi Vaccine Strains to RpoS+ Improves Their Resistance to Host Defense Barriers

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    ABSTRACT The vast majority of live attenuated typhoid vaccines are constructed from the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi strain Ty2, which is devoid of a functioning alternative sigma factor, RpoS, due to the presence of a frameshift mutation. RpoS is a specialized sigma factor that plays an important role in the general stress response of a number of Gram-negative organisms, including Salmonella. Previous studies have demonstrated that this sigma factor is necessary for survival following exposure to acid, hydrogen peroxide, nutrient-limiting conditions, and starvation. In addition, studies with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and the mouse model of typhoid fever have shown that RpoS is important in colonization and survival within the infected murine host. We converted 4 clinically studied candidate typhoid vaccine strains derived from Ty2 [CVD908-htrA, Ty800, and χ9639(pYA3493)] and the licensed live typhoid vaccine Ty21a (also derived from Ty2) to RpoS+ and compared their abilities to withstand environmental stresses that may be encountered within the host to those of the RpoS− parent strains. The results of our study indicate that strains that contain a functional RpoS were better able to survive following stress and that they would be ideal for further development as safe, effective vaccines to prevent S. Typhi infections or as vectors in recombinant attenuated Salmonella vaccines (RASVs) designed to protect against other infectious disease agents in humans. The S. Typhi strains constructed and described here will be made freely available upon request, as will the suicide vector used to convert rpoS mutants to RpoS+. IMPORTANCE Recombinant attenuated Salmonella vaccines (RASVs) represent a unique prevention strategy to combating infectious disease because they utilize the ability of Salmonella to invade and colonize deep effector lymphoid tissues and deliver hetero- and homologous derived antigens at the lowest immunizing dose. Our recent clinical trial in human volunteers indicated that an RpoS+ derivative of Ty2 was better at inducing immune responses than its RpoS− counterpart. In this study, we demonstrate that a functional RpoS allele is beneficial for developing effective live attenuated vaccines against S. Typhi or in using S. Typhi as a recombinant attenuated vaccine vector to deliver other protective antigens

    N2N N4-disubstituted quinazoline-2,4-diamines and uses thereof

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    Described herein are quinazoline-based compounds and formulations thereof. In some embodiments, the compounds and/or formulations thereof can be effective to inhibit and/or kill A. baumannii. Also described herein are methods of treating a subject in need thereof by administering to the subject in need thereof a quinazoline-based compound and/or formulation thereof to the subject in need thereof

    Identification of a unique transcriptional architecture for the \u3cem\u3esig\u3c/em\u3eS operon in \u3cem\u3eStaphylococcus aureus\u3c/em\u3e

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    Staphylococcus aureus possess three alternative σ factors, including a lone extracytoplasmic function σ factor, σS. Our group previously identified and characterized this element, mapping three sigS promoters, demonstrating its inducibility during stress and virulence inducing conditions and demonstrating a role for this factor in disease causation. In the present study, we identify a fourth promoter of the sigS operon, termed P4, located in a unique position internal to the sigS coding region. Transcriptional profiling revealed that expression from P4 is dominant to the three upstream promoters, particularly upon exposure to chemical stressors that elicit DNA damage and disrupt cell wall stability; each of which have previously been shown to stimulate sigS expression. Importantly, expression of this fourth promoter, followed by at least one or more of the upstream promoters, is induced during growth in serum and upon phagocytosis by RAW 264.7 murine macrophage-like cells. Finally, we demonstrate that a downstream gene, SACOL1829, bears a large 3΄ UTR that spans the sigS-SACOL1828 coding region, and may serve to compete with the P4 transcript to inhibit σS production. Collectively, these findings reveal a unique operon architecture for the sigS locus that indicates the potential for novel regulatory mechanisms governing its expression

    Lipo-γ-AApeptides as a New Class of Potent and Broad-Spectrum Antimicrobial Agents

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    There is increasing demand to develop antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) as next generation antibiotic agents, as they have the potential to circumvent emerging drug resistance against conventional antibiotic treatments. Non-natural antimicrobial peptidomimetics are an ideal example of this, as they have significant potency and in vivo stability. Here we report for the first time the design of lipidated γ-AApeptides as antimicrobial agents. These lipo-γ-AApeptides show potent broad-spectrum activities against fungi and a series of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, including clinically relevant pathogens that are resistant to most antibiotics. We have analyzed their structure–function relationship and antimicrobial mechanisms using membrane depolarization and fluorescent microscopy assays. Introduction of unsaturated lipid chain significantly decreases hemolytic activity and thereby increases the selectivity. Furthermore, a representative lipo-γ-AApeptide did not induce drug resistance in <i>S. aureus</i>, even after 17 rounds of passaging. These results suggest that the lipo-γ-AApeptides have bactericidal mechanisms analogous to those of AMPs and have strong potential as a new class of novel antibiotic therapeutics
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